Heritage Education, Sustainability and Community Resilience: The HISTOESE Project-Based Learning Model
Abstract
1. Introduction
- to analyse how PBL projects in initial educator preparation mobilize local heritage and sustainable practices;
- to identify the core pedagogical principles that underpin these practices;
- to formulate a transfer-ready design (HISTOESE) with explicit implications for community partnerships and tourism resilience.
2. Pedagogical Framework and Literature Review
2.1. Heritage Education and Didactic Approaches
2.2. Curricular Context: Heritage Education in the Portuguese System
- Estudo do Meio Social (Environmental and Social Studies): Taught from the 1st to the 4th grade (ages 6–10), this subject is fundamentally interdisciplinary [40]. It aims to develop a child’s understanding of their social and natural environment by integrating concepts from history, geography, science, and civic education. Its holistic nature aligns directly with the HISTOESE model’s core principle of fostering connections between people, time, and place. In this subject, heritage is not a separate discipline but a transversal theme that allows children to explore their local community, family history, and cultural traditions in an integrated manner [44,45].
- História e Geografia de Portugal: Introduced in the 5th and 6th grades (ages 10–12), this subject marks a transition to more formalized historical and geographical disciplines [41]. It focuses on the chronological study of Portuguese history and the exploration of the country’s diverse landscapes. The pedagogical challenge here—which the HISTOESE approach directly addresses—is to move beyond a mere memorization of facts [46]. Instead, the focus is on developing a deep historical consciousness [19] and an understanding of how the past shapes the present.
2.3. Historical Education and Historical Consciousness
2.4. Social Environmental Studies, Sustainability and Curriculum
2.5. Heritage Education, Didactics and Tourism
2.6. Synthesis and Research Gap
- Lack of Integration: Few studies holistically integrate heritage-based learning, historical consciousness, sustainability and teacher training programmes into a single theoretical foundation or empirical framework.
- Limited Empirical Grounding: There is a scarcity of longitudinal, empirical evidence from early childhood and primary settings, especially in cultural contexts with rich local heritage.
- Contextualization: Research on localization and community participation remains limited, with few studies detailing how families and local heritage actors are systematically involved in co-creating educational programmes.
- Longitudinal Studies: Few studies track the evolution of heritage-based learning practices over multiple years or across different regions.
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Research Context and Participants
- Pre-service teachers (master’s students) who developed and documented classroom projects.
- Cooperating teachers and school mentors who provided supervision and feedback.
3.2. Design and Interpretive Stance
- (1)
- analysis of practical problems;
- (2)
- development and iterative testing of solutions;
- (3)
- reflection and refinement leading to design principles.
- Cycle 1—Exploratory Synthesis (corpus analysis): systematic review of historical supervised practice reports and dissertations to identify recurring practices, resources and pedagogical forms. Outcomes: initial set of codes and candidate pedagogical principles.
- Cycle 2—Pilot Implementation (course modules): implementation of PBL activities within master’s courses; classroom enactments and community collaborations tested candidate elements. Outcomes: adaptation of learning sequences, inclusion of in situ activities and partnership templates.
- Cycle 3—Consolidation and Reflection: refinement of the model based on repeated implementations and reflective reporting (student narratives, supervisor feedback), producing the consolidated HISTOESE framework.
3.3. Data Corpus
- Lesson plans and didactic units integrating heritage and sustainability.
- Reflective journals and narratives from pre-service teachers.
- Children’s outputs (drawings, models, storytelling projects).
- Photographic and digital documentation of field activities.
- Supervisory and evaluative feedback.
- Unit of analysis: final master’s dissertations and supervised teaching practice reports produced by pre-service teachers in the master’s programmes (Early Childhood and Primary Education) at ESE-IPVC.
- Corpus size: n ≈ 50 documents (covering academic years 2008–2025).
- Inclusion criteria: (a) documents explicitly addressing local heritage, historical education, or Estudo do Meio with implemented classroom/community activities; (b) reports containing empirical documentation (lesson plans, photographic records, student artefacts, reflective journals); (c) deposited in the institutional repository.
- Exclusion criteria: projects lacking a heritage/sustainability focus or with incomplete documentation.
- Selection procedure: a systematic repository search (keywords: “Património”, “História”, “Estudo do Meio”, “Projecto”), followed by screening titles/abstracts and full-text verification. A selection flowchart indicating initial records, screened items, excluded items, and final corpus will be provided as Supplementary Figure S1.
3.4. Analytical Framework
- Codebook: an initial codebook (operational definitions, inclusion/exclusion rules, exemplar quotes) was developed iteratively from the exploratory phase; the finalized codebook is supplied as Supplementary Table S2.
- Coding procedure: coding was predominantly inductive; codes were grouped into higher-order themes through iterative team meetings and memos.
- Intercoder procedure: a subset of documents (~10–20% of the corpus) was independently coded by a second coder to verify consistency; discrepancies were resolved through discussion and consensus, documented in the audit trail. (If desired, quantitative inter-coder metrics such as percentage agreement or Cohen’s κ may be computed and reported here).
- Reflexivity and audit trail: the researcher maintained reflexive memos throughout, and peer debriefing with colleagues was used to challenge interpretations. Triangulation across document types (plans, artefacts, photographs) strengthened confirmability. All analytic steps are documented for traceability and are available in the Supplementary File.
3.5. Ethical Considerations and AI Tool Usage
- Human oversight: all AI outputs were critically reviewed and validated by the researcher.
- Contextual validation: interpretation and meaning-making remained grounded in the researcher’s expertise and the empirical context.
- Transparency of limitations: LLMs cannot capture cultural nuances and were used only to expedite organisation, not to replace interpretive analysis.
3.6. Emergence of the HISTOESE Design
- Proximity and Contextualization—working with the immediate social, historical, and cultural environment.
- Inclusive and Sustainable Practices—reusing materials, fostering ecological responsibility, and integrating heritage with sustainability.
- Recognition and Valorisation—empowering students and communities to acknowledge, reinterpret, and preserve cultural heritage.
- Active Citizenship and Collaboration—promoting teamwork, creativity, and community participation, both on-site and through digital platforms.
3.7. Visual Representation
4. Discussion and Emergence of the HISTOESE Approach
4.1. From Practice to Theory: A Thematic Synthesis
4.1.1. Identity and Heritage
4.1.2. Citizenship and Participation
4.1.3. Inclusion and Diversity
4.1.4. Didactics of History and Geography
4.1.5. Environmental Education and Sustainability
4.2. Broader Implications of the HISTOESE Design
- Between formal, non-formal, and informal learning: The approach uses families, communities, and nearby heritage as resources for situated, lifelong learning.
- Between education and tourism: By fostering professional and community awareness, it positions cultural heritage as a shared responsibility for sustainable and post-COVID recovery, especially in tourism contexts.
- Between cultural preservation and sustainable innovation: It promotes a glocal approach, rooted in the local heritage of northern Portugal and Galicia, yet designed to be transferable and adaptable to other contexts worldwide.
4.3. Community–Tourism Interfaces
4.4. Conclusions: The HISTOESE Contribution
5. Conclusions and Final Considerations
5.1. Answering the Research Questions
- RQ1. How do PBL-based teacher education projects promote Heritage Literacy and Historical Consciousness in early childhood and primary education? The dissertations functioned as a living laboratory for pedagogical innovation. A consistent pattern of contextualised, inquiry-based practices emerged, enabling pre-service teachers to cultivate children’s awareness of local heritage and historical reasoning.
- RQ2. What pedagogical practices and forms of community collaboration recur across the longitudinal corpus and how do they contribute to Cultural Sustainability? Effective practices integrated PBL, fieldwork, creative reuse of materials, and collaboration with families and community partners. These approaches fostered holistic, situated learning and civic participation consistent with the principles of powerful knowledge and inclusive education.
- RQ3. In what ways can school-based heritage projects be traced to community and tourism outputs, and under what conditions do they support local cultural-tourism recovery?
5.2. Final Considerations and Future Directions
Supplementary Materials
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| IPVC | Polytechnic Institute of Viana do Castelo |
| HISTOESE | History Education for Sustainable Environments |
| PASEO | Student Profile by the End of Compulsory Education |
| PBL | Project-based learning |
| UNESCO | United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization |
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| Level 1 Macro-Themes | Level 2 Subcodes/Indicators |
|---|---|
| A. Local Context & Resources (families, community, local monuments, intangible heritage) | A1: Use of intergenerational knowledge (grandparents, artisans) A2: Field visits and in situ learning (museums, monuments, landscape walks) |
| B. Inclusive & Sustainable Practices (reuse/upcycling of materials, low-cost resources, intentional design) | B1: Use of recycled/waste materials in teaching activities B2: Activities explicitly framed as “sustainable” or ESD |
| C. Professional & Community Education (training sequences, workshops, parental involvement) | C1: Training activities for teachers (micro-teachings, seminars) C2: Collaboration with external actors (museum educators, tourism agents) |
| D. Active Citizenship & Collaboration (teamwork, community projects, civic actions) | D1: Student leadership, community exhibitions, local festivals involvement |
| E. Historical Literacy & Temporal Orientation (use of narratives, temporal sequencing, local history, provenance) | E1: Narrative construction (stories, local legends, chronological exercises) E2: Tools for temporal orientation (timelines, life histories, from my time to our time) |
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© 2025 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Marques, G.M. Heritage Education, Sustainability and Community Resilience: The HISTOESE Project-Based Learning Model. Sustainability 2025, 17, 9891. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219891
Marques GM. Heritage Education, Sustainability and Community Resilience: The HISTOESE Project-Based Learning Model. Sustainability. 2025; 17(21):9891. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219891
Chicago/Turabian StyleMarques, Gonçalo Maia. 2025. "Heritage Education, Sustainability and Community Resilience: The HISTOESE Project-Based Learning Model" Sustainability 17, no. 21: 9891. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219891
APA StyleMarques, G. M. (2025). Heritage Education, Sustainability and Community Resilience: The HISTOESE Project-Based Learning Model. Sustainability, 17(21), 9891. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219891

